October 13, 2018 –
January 27, 2019
Photography Room
Presentation
The year 2019 will mark the
250th anniversary of the birth of Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859). The
Museum Ludwig is taking this anniversary as an occasion to trace
Humboldt’s connection to photography. “People want to see,” wrote the naturalist
and world traveler Alexander von Humboldt. Pictures, whether drawn,
printed, or painted, played a significant role in his life and research.
For instance, he spoke of
“artistically physiognomic” depictions of nature and spent enormous
sums on illustrations for his five-volume work Kosmos: Entwurf einer
physischen Weltbeschreibung. He was one of the first to encounter
photography, at the age of seventy as a member of the three-person
commission that was charged with evaluating the early daguerreotype
process in 1839. It went on to become the first photographic process
practiced world-wide. Humboldt was on a diplomatic mission in Paris and
wrote euphoric letters about these first photographs: “It is certainly
one of the most delightful and admirable discoveries of our time,” and:
“The pictures have a very inimitable natural character that only
nature itself could impress upon them.” He no longer traveled himself,
but in the following twenty years until his death in 1859, Humboldt
surrounded himself with photographs and supported photography on
expeditions.
As a result, he received
albums of photographs as gifts. Two spectacular gift albums with early
photographs are part of the photography collection of the Museum
Ludwig. These include an album from 1844 that the inventor of
photography on paper, W. H. F. Talbot, dedicated to Humboldt—one of
the first photo books ever. Humboldt and Talbot first met in 1827 in
Berlin. They shared a common interest in the natural sciences. The gift
album from 1844 was compiled in the same year as the first parts of his
famous photo book Pencil of Nature. It contains twenty-two photographs,
including a plant photogram, like those that Humboldt might have made
himself if photography had been invented earlier.
The second large-format
album contains forty-seven photos from South America from 1857 and 1858.
The Hungarian-born photographer Paul de Rosti personally presented
Humboldt with this album in 1858 in gratitude for the latter’s support of
his travels. Some of the photographs are the earliest known pictures from
Mexico, Venezuela, and Cuba. These albums entered the collection of the
Museum Ludwig due to Erich Stenger (1878–1957), an early researcher on
Humboldt’s role in the history of photography. Their history and their
journey to the collection of the Museum Ludwig will now be
reconstructed, offering a look back at the early days of photography.
Alexander von Humboldt:
Photography and Legacy is the fifth presentation in the photography
room, which since 2017 has featured changing selections of the
approximately 70,000 works from the Museum Ludwig photography
collection. The photography room is located in the permanent
collection on the second floor.
FOTO LAB
In addition to the
exhibition space, the FOTO LAB will be open as a place for children and
adults to get involved and experiment. Visitors can learn how a camera
obscura—the original model for the camera—works, take pictures of
themselves in front of photographic wallpaper, and even create a small
photo exhibition with fifty reproductions from the photography
collection. These reproductions are made possible by Pixum, the
Cologne-based online photo service, one of the industry’s pioneers, which
was founded in 2000. This will enliven and open up the photography
collection at the Museum Ludwig in a variety of ways.
Photoszene KIDS –
Program for Kids
In addition, for the
first time in cooperation with the Museumsdienst Köln, Photoszene
Festival Cologne will offer a special program for children every first
Thursday of the month: FOTO LAB – Photoszene KIDS. At 3:30 p.m. there will
be a class for schoolchildren ages six and up, and at 4:30 p.m. there will be
a class for preschoolers ages three and up. Museum admission is free for
Cologne residents on this day. Participation in the class costs €3.50.
Digitizing the
Photography Collection
Another important part of
working with the Museum Ludwig’s photography collection is its
digitization in a scholarly database for research purposes. Thanks to
generous support from Pixum, since 2014 the Museum Ludwig has been able
to digitize some 5,000 photographs from the collection for the first
time. The photography collection will gradually be made available to
the public at www.kulturelles-erbe-koeln.de, allowing anyone interested
to access it.
#museumludwig #AvH
https://www.museum-ludwig.de/en/exhibitions/alexander-von-humboldt.html
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